Film Review
The story of the
Titanic
disaster has been told many times in the cinema, but never with the
authority, realism and poignancy of
A
Night to Remember, a superlative adaptation of Walter Lord's
best selling book of the same title. Producer William MacQuitty
was determined to make the film as accurate as possible, so every
incident in the film has a factual basis and all of the sets and models
were designed using the blueprints for the original ship. The
result is a gripping and informative drama-documentary that culminates
in what is possibly the most harrowing twenty minutes of any
film. Although it was not a great commercial success in America
(owing presumably to the absence of big name actors), the film was
highly rated by the critics and it won the Golden Globe award in 1959
in the best English-Language Foreign Film category. Many consider
this to be the finest film ever to be made by the Rank Organisation.
A Night to Remember is
undoubtedly the career highpoint for Roy Baker, who directs the film
with great economy and restraint. He had made several highly
regarded film dramas before this but would become better known for his
offerings in the fantasy horror genre in the following decade,
including
Quatermass and the Pit (1967)
and
Scars of Dracula (1970).
Baker began his career making documentaries and so was an appropriate
choice to direct this film, which is made in the semi-documentary style
that was in vogue in British cinema at the time.
Effective cross-cutting between convincing sets and model shots convey
the full impact of the nautical tragedy which the world would never
forget. Whilst the film feels epic, we never lose sight of the
impact that the disaster has on those individuals who are caught up in
it. Men separated from their wives and children. Lovers
united in death. The panic and stoicism of those who know that
they are about to die. The unreality of the sinking of a craft
that was universally believed to be unsinkable is strangely heightened
by the realistic manner in with which the story of told.
The film also serves as a powerful indictment of the class system
which prevailed in England prior to the
Titanic disaster, a system that
would be swept aside by the war that ravaged Europe a few years later.
There is something quintessentially British about the way in which the
disaster is portrayed. There is no need for the scriptwriter to
embellish the story with plot contrivance and drawn-out character development. The pathos and drama
are already there, in the situation, in the naturalistic depiction of
how human beings respond to a life and death crisis. All this is
a far cry from the overblown Hollywood treatment audiences would later
get from James Cameron in his 1997 blockbuster
Titanic which, whilst a
spectacular piece of cinema, lacks the authentic touch which makes
A Night to Remember so moving and
memorable.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Roy Ward Baker film:
Quatermass and the Pit (1967)
Film Synopsis
On 10th April 1912, RMS
Titanic
leaves the port of Southampton, England on her maiden voyage. At
883 feet in length, she is the largest ship ever to have been built,
and is reputed to be unsinkable. The first class accommodation is
palatial, whilst those who travel steerage class have to content
themselves with bunks in cramped cabins. On 14th April, the
ship's radio operator receives ice warnings from other vessels in the
area but these are unheeded by Captain Edward J. Smith and his second
officer, Charles Lightoller. That night, the ship strikes an
iceberg and incurs a three hundred foot long gash below the
waterline. The ship's builder, Thomas Andrews, is certain that
Titanic will sink within about two
hours. He is proven correct: the lower compartments have already
started to flood and nothing can be done to keep the ship afloat.
The crew begins sending distress signals but the nearest ship to
respond,
Carpathia, is at
least four hours away and will not arrive before
Titanic is completely
submerged. The captain gives the order for the ship to be
evacuated. Knowing that there is space in the lifeboats for only
1178 passengers, the captain realises that around half of the 2223
passengers and crew will perish, so he gives the command that women and
children be put into the lifeboats first. This would be a night
to remember - for the 706 people who would survive...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.